In his address to the journalists, Moyo said that President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government was guaranteeing free, fair and credible elections which will have zero tolerance for political violence in 2018. He also warned the ambassadors to make sure that their countries did not become both players and referees in next year’s elections by being partisan.

The minister talked of international cooperation and mutual respect saying that Zimbabwe was not going to lecture anyone and neither was it going to accept being lectured to. This may have been a reference to the United States of America and the European Union. Both the USA and EU have said that Zimbabwe is not going to get any major financial support unless it implements various electoral and democratic reforms. Said the minister:

We must respect one another.

Moyo said that his mandate was economics and diplomacy. He emphasized that Zimbabwe was willing to engage with other countries and called for counties which had differences with Zimbabwe in the past to bury the hatchet. Said Moyo:

Zimbabwe belongs to the family of nations. Let’s bury our past differences.

The general also said that Zimbabwe was willing to partner with other countries to ensure that it reaches its full economic potential. He reassured the ambassadors that any investments made in Zimbabwe will be safe and will be protected.

We shall continue to partner your nations in the mutual exploitation of our mineral wealth. ….Our manufacturing, tourism and services sector are open to international investors so to create jobs.

We value your participation in the economy and we shall ensure your investments are safe and we will honour all agreements in terms if the law. The right to property shall be respected.

New President Emmerson Mnangagwa on Thursday called for the removal of Western sanctions on members of Zimbabwe’s ruling elite and said elections due in 2018 were “nearer than you expect”.

The United States maintains a travel and economic embargo on several ZANU-PF party officials, top military figures and some government-owned firms. It imposed it during former president Robert Mugabe’s rule over what it called violations of human rights and democracy.

The EU lifted most of its sanctions in 2014 but kept them on Mugabe and his wife Grace.

“We call for the unconditional lifting of the political and economic sanctions, which have crippled our national development,” Mnangagwa told a meeting of the ZANU-PF central committee in downtown Harare.

“We realise that isolation is not splendid or viable as there is more to gain through solidarity, mutually beneficial partnerships.”

Mnangagwa, 75, became leader of the southern African nation last month after the military and ruling ZANU-PF turned against Mugabe, who had ruled the country for 37 years and was thought to be grooming his wife to succeed him.

In the latter half of Mugabe’s rule, the economy collapsed, especially after violent and chaotic seizures of thousands of white-owned commercial farms.

The issuance of billions of dollars of domestic debt to pay for a bloated civil service triggered a collapse in the value of Zimbabwe’s de facto currency and hyperinflation.

The International Monetary Fund has promised to send a staff mission to Zimbabwe soon to meet with officials of the new government and assess the country’s fiscal and economic situation.

The international community will also be closely watching the next elections in 2018. The vote is due at the end of July in 2018 but there is talk it could be brought forward to as early as March.

“FREE AND FAIR” ELECTIONS

“Government will do all in its powers to ensure that the elections are credible, free and fair. These elections are nearer than what you expect,” Mnangagwa said without elaborating.

The ruling and opposition parties have said they will ask electoral authorities to extend next week’s voter registration deadline into February after the de facto military coup last month disrupted the registration process.

Mnangagwa will be confirmed as party leader and its candidate for the presidential elections at a special one-day congress on Friday with Mugabe absent.

The 93-year-old former leader reportedly visited a hospital in Singapore for medical checks this week.

In comments suggesting he intends to draw a line under years of endemic corruption and impunity, Mnangagwa said he would name and shame those who failed to return stolen public funds after a three-month amnesty ending in February next year.

He is under pressure to deliver, especially on the economy, which is in the grip of severe foreign currency shortages.

“I have given three months for those who have taken money out of this country to bring it back,” the president said.

“I didn’t say that without knowledge. I have a list of who took money out, so in March when the period expires, those who have not heeded my moratorium, I will name them and shame them,” he said to loud applause.